He attacked castles, he captured ships, he made people walk the plank
- he said.

He buried his treasure. He said. He buried his treasure in ruined
castles, on desert islands, in jungles. He buried it all over the world.

But Captain Teachum had three secrets...

Captain Teachum is a complex
character who has three guilty secrets, all of which reveal themselves gradually
to the close reader of pictures, like clues in a detective novel, or as a
mounting climax for those who prefer to be taken by surprise. The relationship
between the text and the richly humorous paintings is overtly ironic and
provides the biggest clue of all. 'Captain Teachum was a pirate. He said. He
was the wickedest pirate in the world - he said.' The layout is adventurous and
as daring as the protagonist claims to be. The style combines a vigorous wiry
line and swaggering swish-swash of vibrant inks. I ask you though, if you
observe the great man in his hammock sipping iced drinks, spot the heart-shaped
tattoo on his arm and the sexy luxuriant tuft under it, wonder at the flowers on
the fo'c'sle and the patched sails, would you believe a word he said? JD

One
of the best books I've seen this year is CAPTAIN TEACHUM'S BURIED TREASURE, in
which the horrendously fierce Captain Teachum, incomplete with wooden leg and
eye-patch, proud possessor of a certificate of good piracy and Y-fronts
emblazoned with the skull and crossbones, regales the reader with tales of life
on the high seas, capturing ships and making his enemies walk the plank. But
soon it becomes plain that Teachum has made up all the stories to hide the awful
truth - that he has 25 children and his wife makes him do the washing-up. He
has also forgotten where he buried the treasure (if he had ever had any).
Captain Teachum is a masterly piece of story-telling, wonderfully illustrated by
Korky Paul who has created the untidiest pirate ship ever seen, with stacks of
washing-up, patched sails and barrels of unhappy-looking fish. It quite
restores one's faith in modern children's fiction.

Perhaps Captain Teachum will remember what he did with the treasure
and make a comeback. In the meantime here is a book that satisfactorily
combines elements of fantasy with everyday life and can be read at least 10
times (always a consideration for parents) without making you want to scream.
THE SUNDAY TIMES 12 NOV 89, Carolyn Hart

Turn
the clock back to your innocence but enjoy the 'wickedness' of a pirate bold.
Captain Teachum is your man! If you look carefully, the tell-tale signs are
there: the cat-o'-nine tails, eyepatch, wooden leg and hairy armpits. Author
and illustrator have complemented each other to produce a memorable book.

Korky Paul has climbed into the skin of a child and hasn't missed an
opportunity to convey the all-action baddy. You may have seen his previous work
in The Children's Book Award Winner, WINNIE THE WITCH. I enjoyed spotting the
details but this book would also be ideal to read to a class. It would
encourage lots of discussion and provide inspiration for making treasure maps
and devising original hiding-places.

We are encouraged to investigate the humour and cleverness of the
illustrations by simple statements about how wicked Captain Teachum is, until we
are told of his three secrets: his wife makes him do the washing-up, he has
twenty-five children and an awful memory. So maybe we can find some of his
missing treasure - while we are young.THE ESSEX REVIEW VOL 2, ISSUE 15 AUTUMN 90, Eileen Jousiffe, Buckhurst
Hill Primary School, West Sussex

CAPTAIN
TEACHUM'S BURIED TREASURE may still be buried somewhere. He said. How he
burned cities, sank ships and otherwise did pirate mischief is pictured for us
in minute detail, which does more to amuse than scare even the youngest.

From the endpapers tattered Jolly Roger
to the title pages peg-legged, eye-patched captain, the pages are over-loaded
with illustrator Korky Paul's pirate stuff, all drawn with a fine line and
animated with transparent watercolors. Small mountains of treasure chests
spilling vast quantities of jewels, a parchment treasure map with greek-ish and
Latin-like labels. Strange machines, a pot-bellied villain with a shrewish wife
add fun for all ages.LIBRARY TALK JAN/FEB 92

For
the first third of this book, Captain Teachum seems an extraordinarily violent
and successful pirate. For the next third he seems extraordinarily resourceful
about burying his vast treasure. The last third shows his three secrets: an
even stronger wife, hordes of children, and an appalling memory - so he has
forgotten where the treasure is. That and the repeated refrain of 'he said'
indicates that Captain Teachum may incline towards Baron Munchausen in his
attitude to the truth.

Peter Carter's simple text is itself resourceful. It complements
Korky Paul's wild and inventive pictures perfectly. Even when Captain Teachum
is exposed for the old fraud he is, he still wears a smile of irrepressible
cunning. A lovely production which will give great pleasure.THE SCHOOL LIBRARIAN Dennis Hamley

Rating:
Highly recommended
Illustrations: (Brilliant!) The wonderfully detailed illustrations of
Korky Paul will immediately attract a child's attention and are undoubtedly the
striking feature of this intriguing book. We are introduced to Captain Teachum
who claims to be ³The wickedest pirate in the world² but can we really
believe everything he says? Firing his blunderbuss from the crow's nest of his
galleon, he attacks castles single-handed and captures fleets of ships whose
crews inexplicably surrender to the bold Captain Teachum - or could it be that
they are in awe of his ship's voluptuous figurehead! This wooden-legged
pyromania destroys entire towns. Brandishing his cat-o'-nine tails, this terror
of the seven seas forces the toughest of tattooed sailors to walk the plank,
whilst humanely providing a non-swimming member of the crew with arm-bands - a
nice touch! Even the ship's rats suffer the indignity of being blind-folded by
the Captain's accomplice - a ginger moggy sporting a patch over his right eye!

Needless to say, the bold Teachum accumulates an impressive horde of
treasure.

The reader is presented with a fascinating roll of parchment on which
the captain charts his voyage through the 'Mare Equis Mare', around the
'Promentorium Vulturis' and the 'Promentorium Dentium Fatsium' before heading on
into the teeth of the east wind! Children will no doubt enjoy finding the
locations of the treasure chests which is something that the forgetful Teachum
never succeeds in doing. We see the skull and crossbows flying at both the
North and South Poles as the captain, with snow-shoes strapped to his wooden
leg, buries yet more treasure. How amusing to see the upside-down penguins who
watch bemused as our captain conceals his treasure chests in a circular hole at
the bottom of the world.

Having marvelled at the exploits of this intrepid pirate we discover
that, in the privacy of his own galley, he is, in reality, a hen-pecked husband.
His wife makes him to the washing-up and, as he sits on deck mending the sails,
he is surrounded by his twenty-five children - the perfect father!

This beautifully presented book should appeal to five to seven year
olds who will be enthralled by the delightful illustrations. WESTDENE C P
SCHOOL, Sheila Deen